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Dec 7, 2013
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the men claimed they were tortured at secret c i a prisons in coal and a country that has laws against torture. while cullen has not officially admitting its role in the cit program there is significant and documentary evidence according to complicity from calling for a maniac and lithuania in creating the secret detention facilities for free and research are often black crow we have now heard overwhelming and uncontested evidence at this tag eight was running a secret torture prison on polish soil. but the polish government's given many oppornities to do so the polish government has failed to contest that a new prisoners were being held down the rule of law and tortured by the caa inside their own country. homeland has been conducting internal investigations about their potential participation in the black sites. not yet provided the european court of human rights that any classified documents she and her shoes on tightening your belt because your trip through security checkpoints can get easier. preach fact is that members only club run by the transportation security admistrion. a lo
the men claimed they were tortured at secret c i a prisons in coal and a country that has laws against torture. while cullen has not officially admitting its role in the cit program there is significant and documentary evidence according to complicity from calling for a maniac and lithuania in creating the secret detention facilities for free and research are often black crow we have now heard overwhelming and uncontested evidence at this tag eight was running a secret torture prison on polish...
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daclerc to abolish all apartheid laws. they shared the nobel peace prize in 1983. the next year, mandela became south africa's first black president. >> i cherish the idea of a new south africa, where all south africans are equal. >> reporter: he worked for reconciliation between whites and blacks and oversaw the creation of a constitution that enshrined racial equality. he retired from active pop ticks in 1989 but continues to mediate in conflicts in other countries in africa. news of mandela's death quickly spread around the world. delegates to the u.n. security council adjourned their meeting and observed a moment of silence. >> many around the world were greatly influenced by his selfless struggle for human dignity, equality and freedom. >> reporter: political leaders came, one after another, to speak about what mandela meant to the world. >> we've lost one of the most influential, courageous and profoundly good human beings that any of us will share time with on this earth. >> translator: he achieved a major success in building the nation, his policies centeri
daclerc to abolish all apartheid laws. they shared the nobel peace prize in 1983. the next year, mandela became south africa's first black president. >> i cherish the idea of a new south africa, where all south africans are equal. >> reporter: he worked for reconciliation between whites and blacks and oversaw the creation of a constitution that enshrined racial equality. he retired from active pop ticks in 1989 but continues to mediate in conflicts in other countries in africa. news...
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last month the laws here and on keys. these thoughts and deeds. these ideas great evening all of these leaders just by being the difference is the iraqi war and some of the other circumstances he could come too. since the fall. calm down i guess it's the men who succeeded him and that's present love twenty years after he became christians. that means nothing. it's just. mit's contribution. that's it inspired new generation. to create new we think of the book you read this instead of the idea is all whites means to prevent the blacks and indians and blacks and whites and the freedoms that we are called to include in the ghettos of other peeps silky would be very satisfied that after ninety five years he's made a contribution to sea we must think of each other's differently from all the europeans wanted us to think so. again don't come back to this whole point of greeting people with different this nation has seen better but it's the imprisonment of up to. um i'm not sure that they think all that and the politics of nelson mandela for the pics all f
last month the laws here and on keys. these thoughts and deeds. these ideas great evening all of these leaders just by being the difference is the iraqi war and some of the other circumstances he could come too. since the fall. calm down i guess it's the men who succeeded him and that's present love twenty years after he became christians. that means nothing. it's just. mit's contribution. that's it inspired new generation. to create new we think of the book you read this instead of the idea is...
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and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care law. open enrollment ends december 7th. so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare ♪ >> people around the world remembering the great nelson mandela, prisoner turned president who reconciled a country and changed the world. mandela has long been a symbol of hope and freedom for millions of people around the world, all walks of life. >> yeah, universally helped to break the shackles of racial segregation, do away with white minority rule in south africa, but instead of anger against the oppressors, he chose forgiveness, patience and understanding. it worked, too. our colleague nadia belichick is a friend to the mandela family and joins us now to talk about this leader on an iconic -- on a very personal level. now, you were back in south africa just last week. >> yes, i was back last week and i got to spend the morning with winnie and the granddaughter zazi. and i said how is madiba doing and they said the same. and the same meant he still had tubes that were draining the
and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care law. open enrollment ends december 7th. so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare ♪ >> people around the world remembering the great nelson mandela, prisoner turned president who reconciled a country and changed the world. mandela has long been a symbol of hope and freedom for millions of people around the world, all walks of life. >> yeah, universally helped to break the shackles of racial...
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by 1999, was used as a ball and chain, shackling the the law was repealed. but when the 2008 financial crisis left taxpayers on the hook for hundreds of billions of dollars in bank bail outs, the spirit of glassed eagle was reborn as the vol kerr rule. >> it is important, because we want to make sure we are protecting the deposits that are federally insured from risky behavior. we don't want to endanger those deposited. >> named after paul vol kerr, the former federal reserve chairman, the rule banned banks that take federally insured deposits from engaging in so called proprior tear trading. >> widely seen as the center piece of the wall street reform and consumer protection act, it has become contentious, because unlike glassed eagle it does not ban all trading. >> banks can still trade securities or execute trades for their customers. and for years now, regulators have been rangeling with how to distinguish those ben nine trades from ones that can harm a bank. >> those who favor a tough interpretation, point to the $6 billion trading loss jpmorgan chase i
by 1999, was used as a ball and chain, shackling the the law was repealed. but when the 2008 financial crisis left taxpayers on the hook for hundreds of billions of dollars in bank bail outs, the spirit of glassed eagle was reborn as the vol kerr rule. >> it is important, because we want to make sure we are protecting the deposits that are federally insured from risky behavior. we don't want to endanger those deposited. >> named after paul vol kerr, the former federal reserve...
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it was not lawful to have an image of nelson mandela. people were sent to prison for having a photograph of him. he had been suppressed. he finally made that walk to freedom. the very next day, i remember sitting in the garden at the first conference that he gave and i asked him quite simply, what surprised you most as he made that walk to the prison gates and he said, it was a number of white people that have come out among the huge crowd. that was a deliberately reconciling statement already had that very first instant that he was being political. he was holding out a hand to the minority that had oppressed him. he knew he had to embrace. that is extraordinary to hear from a man who lost 27 years of life, had been imprisoned when his first son had died. who have suffered so much deprivation. was radiating forgiveness. that is my abiding memory. he was in the fullest sense of this word a unique figure. >> he was. it was his utter dignity and forgiveness that marked him out. he inspired whole nations and i want to make one brief point, h
it was not lawful to have an image of nelson mandela. people were sent to prison for having a photograph of him. he had been suppressed. he finally made that walk to freedom. the very next day, i remember sitting in the garden at the first conference that he gave and i asked him quite simply, what surprised you most as he made that walk to the prison gates and he said, it was a number of white people that have come out among the huge crowd. that was a deliberately reconciling statement already...
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." >> reporter: his practice, the first black-run law firm in south africa, was flourishing, but he could not stay neutral against apartheid. a system that made blacks second class citizens, separate housing and schools. crushing poverty. >> for more than three centuries we have lived at the most brutal system of racial oppression. >> reporter: mandela found his calling in the fight against apartheid. a south africa, where the white minority ruled a population that was nearly 90% black. and created divisions, committed untold massacres of innocent people because they wanted to be treated with dignity. his party, the african national congress, was committed to non violent resistance. but many of his own supporters would often ask why so many of their own paying the price. >> there are many people who feel that it is useless and futile for us to continue talking peace and non-violence against a government whose only reply is only savage attacks on an unarmed and defenseless people. >> reporter: peaceful resistance -- until the sharpeville massacre in 1960, when white police shot 69 unarmed
." >> reporter: his practice, the first black-run law firm in south africa, was flourishing, but he could not stay neutral against apartheid. a system that made blacks second class citizens, separate housing and schools. crushing poverty. >> for more than three centuries we have lived at the most brutal system of racial oppression. >> reporter: mandela found his calling in the fight against apartheid. a south africa, where the white minority ruled a population that was...
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he helped sign into law the law that outlawed discrimination against the white minority. that belief in reconciliation that created a new south africa. that was a model for nations for people around the world. >> did he do it with kindness? >> he did it with love and with kindness and wit and humor. when he came here, he so impressed american presidents, we know how close he was with bill clinton on his 94th birthday, clinton went in july of 2012 to celebrate that 94th birthday with him. he was too ill in june of this past year to be visited by president obama and his family. they very much wanted to, but he was such an inspiration for a young barack obama as the colleague student and a community leader and a law student and we saw how important it was to bring his girls to show them by example the tiny space in which this great man lived. the empowering morals of the great leader and gandhi and abraham lincoln. it was so something so profoundly large in his spirit and the way he addressed even those of us who were younger reporters. the foreign press core always with res
he helped sign into law the law that outlawed discrimination against the white minority. that belief in reconciliation that created a new south africa. that was a model for nations for people around the world. >> did he do it with kindness? >> he did it with love and with kindness and wit and humor. when he came here, he so impressed american presidents, we know how close he was with bill clinton on his 94th birthday, clinton went in july of 2012 to celebrate that 94th birthday with...
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mentor once told me a lovely story when young nelson mandela who first came to johannesburg to study law walked into zulu ice real estate office in soweto we were just trying to become a mass movement and one day a mass leader walked into my office. >> rose: also part of this program, a conversation with nelson mandela which took place here on this program in 1993. >> and the lesson is that the method of the people, the method of political method to be used, part determined by the oppressor himself, if the oppres oppressos peaceful means, we will never result to violence. it is when the oppressor in addition to repressive policies uses violence that the oppress have had no alternative but to retaliate by similar forms of action. and therefore, the pains, the blood that was spilled, the responsibility for that lies squarely on the soldiers. >> rose: mandela for the hour, next. >> funding for charlie rose but provided by the following. >> captioning sponsored by rose communications from our studios in new york city, this is charlie rose. et it fall, let there be work,b, god bless south afr
mentor once told me a lovely story when young nelson mandela who first came to johannesburg to study law walked into zulu ice real estate office in soweto we were just trying to become a mass movement and one day a mass leader walked into my office. >> rose: also part of this program, a conversation with nelson mandela which took place here on this program in 1993. >> and the lesson is that the method of the people, the method of political method to be used, part determined by the...
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. >> this powell, 81% of respondents believe the law should be changed or repealed. let's just work with changed since that's probably easier at the moment. it's impossible for me today not to look through the lens of nelson mandela, but is there any way that the white house and republicans could ever just come together and figure out how to fix this thing? >> well, i would hope they would and certainly that is the legacy, the enduring legacy of mandela, which is compromise rising above your circumstances, but i think this president has picked a very different strategy. he is going to double down on obama care and he is going to attack the republicans and let's be clear while the democrats have huge political liabilities, the republicans have lower ratings and are seen as the party of no and the president exploited that in the re-election last year and he's betting he can do it again. >> ed, you just said something there about how he's dragging these candidates towards this issue. it's not like they can run away from it. this is the whole campaign next november. >> h
. >> this powell, 81% of respondents believe the law should be changed or repealed. let's just work with changed since that's probably easier at the moment. it's impossible for me today not to look through the lens of nelson mandela, but is there any way that the white house and republicans could ever just come together and figure out how to fix this thing? >> well, i would hope they would and certainly that is the legacy, the enduring legacy of mandela, which is compromise rising...
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. >> this law is working and will future.o the gwen: is it all too good to be true? >> while the white house wants to claim that healthcare.gov is now working, we know that obamacare is still plagued with problems. gwen: outside washington, detroit is headed into bankruptcy, pensions are disappearing and low wage workers say they're being left out. >> people cannot survive on $8.25 in this country. gwen: and -- we remember nelson mandela. >> there's mr. mandela, mr. nelson mandela, a free man taking his first steps into a new south africa. gwen: covering the week, jackie calmes of the "new york times," michael fletcher of "the washington post," and david wessel of "the wall street journal." >> award-winning reporting and analysis covering history as it happens. live, from our nation's capitol, this is "washington week" with gwen ifill. corporate funding for "washington week" is provided by -- we know inw-up, cyber world, threats are always evolving. we were protecting networks, then we were protecting the transfer of data, today, it's evolved to , finance, and milita
. >> this law is working and will future.o the gwen: is it all too good to be true? >> while the white house wants to claim that healthcare.gov is now working, we know that obamacare is still plagued with problems. gwen: outside washington, detroit is headed into bankruptcy, pensions are disappearing and low wage workers say they're being left out. >> people cannot survive on $8.25 in this country. gwen: and -- we remember nelson mandela. >> there's mr. mandela, mr....
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he speaks some christmas in the italian law enjoyed the benefits. all done it again if i'm a self all heart on that had just the same as the pa for a kind of trip atonement for protection how dumb it because i'm cool with extremists who was ultimately released from behind these moles back into society. it's been three weeks now since the air crash in the russian city of cuz on that killed fifty people in the investigation into the disaster has revealed the aircraft was being piloted by people with fake licences. on that on our website plots president obama is an afghan policy may have led to increased casualties among u s service personnel that the full story about he got caught. right from the sea. the interesting picture. reporters were there the animal. the move on the it. making headlines around the world previous hour you're on is moving ahead with tests on more efficient technology to enrich uranium. this comes just two weeks after six world powers clinched a deal with tehran over its nuclear program. the move does not openly contradicted the
he speaks some christmas in the italian law enjoyed the benefits. all done it again if i'm a self all heart on that had just the same as the pa for a kind of trip atonement for protection how dumb it because i'm cool with extremists who was ultimately released from behind these moles back into society. it's been three weeks now since the air crash in the russian city of cuz on that killed fifty people in the investigation into the disaster has revealed the aircraft was being piloted by people...
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after going to school and law his trouble making began. as a boxer, he bill adept at picking fights and sparring with the apartheid authorities which increased suppression against the black population. it was then mandela made the crucial decision to take up an arms struggle, launching african national congress's right wing. he defiantly burned his passport, a dreaded document the apartheid authorities used to control the movement of south africa's black population. >> the africans require, want, the temperature on the basis of one man one vote. they want political independence. >> reporter: that simple demand and the methods mandela took to fight for democracy eventually saw him and others tried for treason and sabotage by the apartheid government. punishable by death. they were banished to life instead. another political prisoner remembers the first time he saw mandela in a prison yard. >> i could see from the way he walked and from his conduct that here was a man already stamping his authority on prison regime. >> reporter: mandela was
after going to school and law his trouble making began. as a boxer, he bill adept at picking fights and sparring with the apartheid authorities which increased suppression against the black population. it was then mandela made the crucial decision to take up an arms struggle, launching african national congress's right wing. he defiantly burned his passport, a dreaded document the apartheid authorities used to control the movement of south africa's black population. >> the africans...
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and under the rule of law there is no opportunity for the only other. democratic run through every time the right. well the opposition continue their blockade of certain government buildings despite the fact a deadline set by the government for them to be out of those buildings is looming large and expires on tuesday on the delegations support for the opposition comes despite pleas from ukraine's prime minister for outside interference to stop on the delegation also similar were condemning what they described as russia's pressure on kiev well as for the protests they look set to continue into the evening here behind me with all eyes now on sunday when organizers hope that up to one million people from all over ukraine could descend on the capital. to to have an army pay why european politicians are cozying up to ukraine's opposition it's not against. ship i think there's just so dire solidarity if they stir protesters and i think we want that association extreme and this deal is signed bond of course still crying to be on a long term member of the union
and under the rule of law there is no opportunity for the only other. democratic run through every time the right. well the opposition continue their blockade of certain government buildings despite the fact a deadline set by the government for them to be out of those buildings is looming large and expires on tuesday on the delegations support for the opposition comes despite pleas from ukraine's prime minister for outside interference to stop on the delegation also similar were condemning what...
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what other -- do supporters have that the law is intended. juan? >> well, i think you deserve a straight answer because the snowstorm of partisan politics around the obama care thing right now, so i'd say this number one thing i would say is just look at this week. a million people went to the website as it was working, so it's an appetite, a real need. millions more in adequately insured who can avoid bankruptcy, illnesses and so, number two, i think it's the reason i think this is going to work is it doesn't disrupt the market for most people. nobody on this panel is is going to have their health care affected, impacted by what's taken place. 70% have employer provided insurance and that's stays in place right now. massachusetts, the republican model worked. and has high approval ratings in the state. fourth, i'd say the insurance companies are investing in this. the insurance company want this to work. my last point on this is the cost of health care has increase has declined over the last three years. as preexisting conditions now is removed. w
what other -- do supporters have that the law is intended. juan? >> well, i think you deserve a straight answer because the snowstorm of partisan politics around the obama care thing right now, so i'd say this number one thing i would say is just look at this week. a million people went to the website as it was working, so it's an appetite, a real need. millions more in adequately insured who can avoid bankruptcy, illnesses and so, number two, i think it's the reason i think this is going...
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they have high-end changing tax laws, difficult labor laws across the board, and they for bid dailymotion to be bought out by yahoo!. too many startups go to london. it is easier. they are trying to change that around. yet more plenty -- money pumped in. the government is putting its money where its mouth is. million euros are going into this. i will be talking about this with our guests. i will be talking to someone with birch box. i will be saying what she thinks the sentiment is like here. after you. -- back to you. >> speaking of tech companies, nokia is said to be nearing a deal with india tax authority. it is ready to pay off to microsoft. we have the details from hong kong. >> a very good morning to you. we are watching what is happening from the delhi high court. they are ready to rule on its key assets today. the company is close to settling a tax dispute in india which should help complete a deal with microsoft. the finnish company is said to be willing to pay half $1 billion to unfreeze assets. why were they frozen to begin with? on and taxes were going the country froze its as
they have high-end changing tax laws, difficult labor laws across the board, and they for bid dailymotion to be bought out by yahoo!. too many startups go to london. it is easier. they are trying to change that around. yet more plenty -- money pumped in. the government is putting its money where its mouth is. million euros are going into this. i will be talking about this with our guests. i will be talking to someone with birch box. i will be saying what she thinks the sentiment is like here....
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passed laws. all language of segregation that expressed inhumanity to man. nelson mandela struggle was made more active. his was a journey that spanned six decades from an activism in the 1940s and 50s through nearly four decades of incarceration. it led to the end of apartheid and his election to the highest office in south africa. it was a long walk to freedom. thererisoner in his cell, must've been times when nelson mandela felt that his fists were beating against the wall that would not be moved but he never wavered. as he famously said at his trial, he wanted to achieve the ideal of a democratic and free society. it was also an ideal for which he was prepared to die for. even after long years of imprisonment, he rejected offers of freedom until he removed as they removed all the conditions. beliefas a believe in -- in human dignity, that no one was naturally superior than anyone else. as he said so powerfully when he came to speak in this parliament , in the end, the cries of the infant who died because of hunger or because a slid open it stomach will p
passed laws. all language of segregation that expressed inhumanity to man. nelson mandela struggle was made more active. his was a journey that spanned six decades from an activism in the 1940s and 50s through nearly four decades of incarceration. it led to the end of apartheid and his election to the highest office in south africa. it was a long walk to freedom. thererisoner in his cell, must've been times when nelson mandela felt that his fists were beating against the wall that would not be...
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convinced everybody that can't have communists running around, and that's how they made these racist laws work and work, and his comrades as he called them, worked around that. and they persisted. as thomas says, of something that looked like it would never change is the hallmark of these anc men and women. that you would never seen pictures like this. >> in the old days you would have been arrested for have blacks and whites arm in arm chanting in the street, couldn't do that. >> as we get closer to the top of the hour here, and we rescap where we are on this day, for the nation of sought africa, and ink deed, the world. nelson mandela, the father of the modern south africa has passed away, 95 years old, and this is one of the most isogeneic pieces of video in the world. >> yep. >> this is february 11th. themson mandela, hand in hand with his then wife winny. walking out of prison. and alley, you had told us an amazing story of your connection to south africa, and your family's connection. >> i remember this day. i remember it's hard to keep it together looking at this, because i remembe
convinced everybody that can't have communists running around, and that's how they made these racist laws work and work, and his comrades as he called them, worked around that. and they persisted. as thomas says, of something that looked like it would never change is the hallmark of these anc men and women. that you would never seen pictures like this. >> in the old days you would have been arrested for have blacks and whites arm in arm chanting in the street, couldn't do that. >>...
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i guess the law by actual call date on here. i mean the business is a mainstream summit agenda but i'm some of some of the damages are no eu headquarters to a new doctor is a bakery but i i i think it passes a can of convivial place this pianist. i love the business people coming here. the push of the summers i understand all this week's events in paris is commercial in that it is a big interest in what promises to be too economically in africa and so on so for all the talk of china. yes taking every over that when you see that when it comes to push comes to shopping booths on the grounds. it's the french him that well at that and when you see here the summit as you say congenial place to work and it was neat and i think the finance minister and punishments to make it to clear the air we go into acting with and thirty billion dollar profit to thirty billion dollars of bmg of trade with africa. time is up there with two hundred billion dollars in it. he was to catch up. we wanted to push rods in that direction and doubling it wit
i guess the law by actual call date on here. i mean the business is a mainstream summit agenda but i'm some of some of the damages are no eu headquarters to a new doctor is a bakery but i i i think it passes a can of convivial place this pianist. i love the business people coming here. the push of the summers i understand all this week's events in paris is commercial in that it is a big interest in what promises to be too economically in africa and so on so for all the talk of china. yes taking...
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after moving to johannesburg and studying law, as a boxer he would pick fights and sparring with the apartheid authorities which had increased. he was militant and a fire brand and burning his passbook a dreaded boumt the apartheid authorities used to control the movements of south africa's black population. >> the africans require the franchise on the ages of one man, one vote. >> reporter: that simple demand and methods mandela took to fight for democracy saw him and others tried for treason. but they got life in prison instead and to robben island. another political prisoner remembers the first time he saw mandela in the prison yard. >> i could see from the way he walked and from his conduct that he was a man already stamping his authority on prison regime. >> reporter: mandela was relieved 27 years later. >> i have spoken about freedom in my lifetime. your commitment at your discipline has released me to stand before you today. >> reporter: his lack of bitterness toward the apartheid authorities helped him lead one of the remarkable transitions in the 20th century. mandela the tr
after moving to johannesburg and studying law, as a boxer he would pick fights and sparring with the apartheid authorities which had increased. he was militant and a fire brand and burning his passbook a dreaded boumt the apartheid authorities used to control the movements of south africa's black population. >> the africans require the franchise on the ages of one man, one vote. >> reporter: that simple demand and methods mandela took to fight for democracy saw him and others tried...
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to this day the men claim that they were tortured at secret cia prisons in poland a country that has laws against torture while poland has not officially admitted its role in the cia program there is significant documentary evidence pointing to complicity from poland romania and lithuania in creating these secret detention facilities for free research or crofton black wrote quote we have now heard overwhelming and uncontested evidence that the cia was running a secret torture prison on polish soil with the polish government's knowledge despite being given many opportunities to do so the polish government has failed to contest that it knew prisoners were being held beyond the rule of law and tortured by the cia inside their own country poland has been conducting internal investigations about their potential participation in the black sites but has not yet provided the european court of human rights with any classified documents. keep your shoes on and tighten your belt because your trip through security checkpoints could get easier pre-check is the members only club run by the transportati
to this day the men claim that they were tortured at secret cia prisons in poland a country that has laws against torture while poland has not officially admitted its role in the cia program there is significant documentary evidence pointing to complicity from poland romania and lithuania in creating these secret detention facilities for free research or crofton black wrote quote we have now heard overwhelming and uncontested evidence that the cia was running a secret torture prison on polish...
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he changed laws but he also changed hearts. for the people of south africa. for those he inspired around the globe, madiba's passing is rightly a time of mourning and a time to celebrate a heroic life. i believe it will also prompt in each of us a time for self-reflection, with honesty, regardless of our station or our circumstance. we must ask, how well have i applied his lessons in my own life. that is the question i ask myself as a man and as a president. we know that like south africa, the united states had to overcome centuries of racial subrogation as was true here. it took sacrifice. the sacrifices of countless people known and unknown, to see the dawn of a new day. michelle and i are beneficiaries of that struggle. in america and in south africa and in countries all around the globe, we can not allow our progress to cloud the fact that our being able to come back and to forgive. and to reconcile and to build a nation. the evolution took place in him. >> we want to go to mark phillips who is about five miles away from this stadium where there is a huge
he changed laws but he also changed hearts. for the people of south africa. for those he inspired around the globe, madiba's passing is rightly a time of mourning and a time to celebrate a heroic life. i believe it will also prompt in each of us a time for self-reflection, with honesty, regardless of our station or our circumstance. we must ask, how well have i applied his lessons in my own life. that is the question i ask myself as a man and as a president. we know that like south africa, the...
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and swiss law since 1988, u.s.-swiss agreement contains all provisions man tated by section 233 of the social security act and other provisions that i deem appropriate to carry out the purposes of section 233, pursuant to section 233c-4 of the social security act i also transmit for the information of the congress a report prepared by the social security administrate explaining the key points of the u.s.-swiss agreement along with a paragraph by paragraph explanation of the provisions of the agreement and administrative arrangement and next to this report is the report required by section 243-e-1 on the social security act on the numb of individuals affected by the agreement and the effect of the agreement on the estimated income and expenditures of the u.s. social security program. the department of state and the social security administration have recommended the u.s.-swiss agreement and related documents to me. i commend the u.s.-swiss agreement on social security and related documents. signed, barack obama, the
and swiss law since 1988, u.s.-swiss agreement contains all provisions man tated by section 233 of the social security act and other provisions that i deem appropriate to carry out the purposes of section 233, pursuant to section 233c-4 of the social security act i also transmit for the information of the congress a report prepared by the social security administrate explaining the key points of the u.s.-swiss agreement along with a paragraph by paragraph explanation of the provisions of the...
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it turns out it wasn't so much rule of law consistent as rule of law add -- adjacent. the n.s.a. has been routinely breaking privacy rules. >> jon: rules are made to be broken. sorry, wait that is no precious moments figures. those are knead be broken. rules are made to be followed. even though they said repeatedly these programs are only used to catch bad guys. >> reports surfacing that some employees are tracking their love interests. >> using the enormous power of the government to eavesdrop on their significant others or people they would like to become their significant others. [ laughter ] >> jon: hey, i just met you and this is crazy but here is your number of your bank account and social security so call me or i'll continue to mon tour your activities. [laughter] i feel like at this point our intelligence community is pretty much even owning the fact that they are getting nefarious. last week the national reconnaissance office launched this spy satellite into orbit the logo they chose for the spy rocket this, is real a giant octopus sucking the face off of new york americ
it turns out it wasn't so much rule of law consistent as rule of law add -- adjacent. the n.s.a. has been routinely breaking privacy rules. >> jon: rules are made to be broken. sorry, wait that is no precious moments figures. those are knead be broken. rules are made to be followed. even though they said repeatedly these programs are only used to catch bad guys. >> reports surfacing that some employees are tracking their love interests. >> using the enormous power of the...
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he would try to use the laws. if that didn't work, he was repaired to resort to violence and he did. but when the violence was getting out of control and it was obvious then that the white leadership was getting ready to reach out to him, he didn't compromise his principles. he insisted on tend of apartheid and a new way of life in south africa. so he believed and he sacrificed for his belief and he never strayed from his purpose. we all seen leaders like that, who have a clear vision, a clear purpose and who have moral courage and fiscal courage to do whatever is fwhes to succeed and that's what he did. that's what makes him an dpl to us. that's inspiration for the entire world. >> tell us if you would as somebody who had met him so many times, if have you any personal stories to share to lel let us in, so many of us know him only from television or his books or his speeches be you you actually had occasion to know him. >> i knew him. i had dinner with him. i had conversations with him. what always struck me was
he would try to use the laws. if that didn't work, he was repaired to resort to violence and he did. but when the violence was getting out of control and it was obvious then that the white leadership was getting ready to reach out to him, he didn't compromise his principles. he insisted on tend of apartheid and a new way of life in south africa. so he believed and he sacrificed for his belief and he never strayed from his purpose. we all seen leaders like that, who have a clear vision, a clear...
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plus, with the website working better and enrollment on the rise, we'll ask one of the law's architects, dr. ezequiel emanuel where obama care goes from here. >>> it's been ten years since i took over the anchor chair here. it's been quite a ride. we'll look back at some of our favorite moments from the last ten years. all right now on "fox news sunday." >>> and hello again from fox news in washington. this is a national day of prayer and reflection in south africa. as that nation continues to mourn the man many consider its father. south africans gathered at makeshift shrines to remember nelson mandela who died thursday at the age of 95. fox news senior foreign affairs correspondent is live outside mandela's home in johannesburg with the latest. >> reporter: chris, this was supposed to be that national day of prayer and reflection. and, in fact, across the country it's filled with people marking the day. here in what was the old home neighborhood of nelson mandela, just a few days after his passing, the mood here is anything but solemn. in fact, it is festive. take a look at what we sa
plus, with the website working better and enrollment on the rise, we'll ask one of the law's architects, dr. ezequiel emanuel where obama care goes from here. >>> it's been ten years since i took over the anchor chair here. it's been quite a ride. we'll look back at some of our favorite moments from the last ten years. all right now on "fox news sunday." >>> and hello again from fox news in washington. this is a national day of prayer and reflection in south africa....
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their fall into of the circumstances of mr cruz and mr abbas matters the police were called there by law the ones who were concerned about their family members but not because they're private in committee and with respect to mr chamberlain who was a sixty eight year old retired marine mr chamberlain happened to roll over and trigger his life pendant by mistake and as a pendant it was designed to allow him to call for assistance if you had a medical emergency so there are a lot of these individuals were the police would be arriving wow well in the case of bobby bennett i'm not sure if you're familiar with that his mother did call the police department to come help with her son she couldn't handle it on her own but she specifically warned them that he had a mental issue and of course we know that he was vigorously shot there after is there something more as a family member she was supposed to do to prevent that from happening or did she do all she could. well she probably did all she could because unfortunately we're not training in how to deal with mental illness or the other issues that
their fall into of the circumstances of mr cruz and mr abbas matters the police were called there by law the ones who were concerned about their family members but not because they're private in committee and with respect to mr chamberlain who was a sixty eight year old retired marine mr chamberlain happened to roll over and trigger his life pendant by mistake and as a pendant it was designed to allow him to call for assistance if you had a medical emergency so there are a lot of these...
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he quickly rose to prominence as a lawyer, founding the country's first black law firm, and leading agitator for change. especially after the terrible sharpville massacre in 1960 when he and the african national congress took up armed struggle. >> there are many people who feel that it is useless and futile for us to continue talking peace and nonviolence against a government who is on this savage path against unarmed and defenseless people. >> reporter: mandela was a born leader. so in 1964 the apartheid government tried him for treason and sought the dead penalty. his opening statement to the court electrified the country. >> i have cherished the ideals of a democratic and free society. it is an idea for which i hope to live for and to see realized. but my lord, if it needs be, it is an idea for which i am prepared to die. >> reporter: mandela was sentenced to life imprisonment and sent to the notorious robben island prison. he was not heard from for nearly 30 years. he was just prisoner number 46664. the years passed in prison. mandela became a myth, a global symbol for the fight against
he quickly rose to prominence as a lawyer, founding the country's first black law firm, and leading agitator for change. especially after the terrible sharpville massacre in 1960 when he and the african national congress took up armed struggle. >> there are many people who feel that it is useless and futile for us to continue talking peace and nonviolence against a government who is on this savage path against unarmed and defenseless people. >> reporter: mandela was a born leader....
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in the 1940's, he began opposing minority's policy of apartheid laws that segregated society. first, mandela was inspired by approach of nonviolent resistance. as white south africa became more aggressive, so did he. as the head of the armed wing of the african national congress, mandela led violent sabotage attacks and was arrested and in 1962. he would spend 27 years in jail. he was never forgotten. eventually, international and internal pressure led president klerk to announce apartheid would be dismantled and mandela would walk free. rather than seek richer view showing, nelson mandela reached oppressors.ormer he tried to heal a divided nation. and the clerk -- de klerk shared the nobel peace prize. >> in 1994, he voted for the with millions of his fellow black south africans. became a statesman and international icon. for south africa he was a symbol of the country and wanted to be despite struggles with poverty, and -- >> free of hatred, free of ofterness, free of any idea revenge. --many will remember this mandela celebrating south africa's place on the world hosted the
in the 1940's, he began opposing minority's policy of apartheid laws that segregated society. first, mandela was inspired by approach of nonviolent resistance. as white south africa became more aggressive, so did he. as the head of the armed wing of the african national congress, mandela led violent sabotage attacks and was arrested and in 1962. he would spend 27 years in jail. he was never forgotten. eventually, international and internal pressure led president klerk to announce apartheid...
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the law is expected to pass in the senate and then go to the president for final approval. >>> canada has signaled intentions to claim the north pole and surrounding arctic waters as part of its own territory. the area contains 30% of the world's undiscovered natural gas and 15% of oil. canada has filed a un application seeking to expand its atlantic sea boundary. >> today we mark an important milestone tos a dert -- to assert and defend our national sovereignsy. we'll secure un approval of the securing the full shelf as part of our great country. >>> the u.s. has an ecological problem. its wetlands are disappearing fast, putting wildlife and their own food chain at risk. the reason? well, it's climate change according to scientists. rob rents -- reynolds has the story. >> reporter: more than 1400 square kilometers of wetlands in the united states have disappeared in the past four years, and the loss is accelerating a new study stays. marsh lands and swamps are crucial breeding grounds. and they provide a buffer against storm surges. but a combination of powerful storms, rising sea le
the law is expected to pass in the senate and then go to the president for final approval. >>> canada has signaled intentions to claim the north pole and surrounding arctic waters as part of its own territory. the area contains 30% of the world's undiscovered natural gas and 15% of oil. canada has filed a un application seeking to expand its atlantic sea boundary. >> today we mark an important milestone tos a dert -- to assert and defend our national sovereignsy. we'll secure un...
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i was young federal law struggle for democracy and against apartheid in south africa to the wells attached. as leader of the african national congress. he initially chosen strategy of civil disobedience. then came the shell bill massacre in nineteen sixty. when sixty nine to protest this with you domestic dispute i'll still be sent home by the us with the government has been the response was savage attacks. i am. nineteen sixty three cm and was arrested and sentenced to life in prison it wasn't until the eleventh if the pre nineteen ninety that he was finally released the announcement came up to twenty seven years of languishing in iraq but by the priest. go read it to the last president of apartheid era south africa said the government has likened of indecision duties was to monday on condition that was the model of mr nelson and emma. a free man taking his first steps. in two and use of every reception committee trying to get the people. it's a new phone as the nelson mandela is rife with me. delaware awarded the nobel peace prize in nineteen ninety three. oh well the r in nineteen ninet
i was young federal law struggle for democracy and against apartheid in south africa to the wells attached. as leader of the african national congress. he initially chosen strategy of civil disobedience. then came the shell bill massacre in nineteen sixty. when sixty nine to protest this with you domestic dispute i'll still be sent home by the us with the government has been the response was savage attacks. i am. nineteen sixty three cm and was arrested and sentenced to life in prison it wasn't...
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he is not going to prison, at least not today, because he is appealing and therefore under french law, he can go home. and there is still wider questioned to the answer, not the least, just what impasse will they have on the long term health. the answer to that one may not come for many more years. al jazeera. >> i will be back with more news from europe later on, let's get ball to doha. >> thank you. according to ben he dash, the execution of a man convicted of war crimes. he was supposed to be hanged on tuesday, he is a one of a number of people to be convicted by the war crimes. he says the charges are politically motivated. >> israel jordan and palestinian authority have signed a new water sharing agreement. they will start work on a new pipeline from the red sea to the dead sea. al jazeera has the story. this tourist attraction is so rich in salt, that people float naturally in it. with water dropping as much as a meter a year. signed by israel, jordan, and the palestinian authority, is to slow down the decline, while providing water. >> we are joining hands with our regional par
he is not going to prison, at least not today, because he is appealing and therefore under french law, he can go home. and there is still wider questioned to the answer, not the least, just what impasse will they have on the long term health. the answer to that one may not come for many more years. al jazeera. >> i will be back with more news from europe later on, let's get ball to doha. >> thank you. according to ben he dash, the execution of a man convicted of war crimes. he was...
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it was a brutal, racist system that in 1948 was made the law of the land. >> the laws were unjust laws, and they did not oblige obedience. >> teichner: archbishop desmond tutu remembers how it began, as mandela rose in the ranks of leadership of a civil rights group called the african national congress, the a.n.c. >> they were the revolutionaries of their day. they were the wild young men. >> teichner: former "time" magazine editor rick stengel spent countless hours in private conversation with mandela while collaborating on mandela's autobiography. >> mandela went to johannesburg as a young man and was treated in the terrible way that young black men were treated in the 1950s. i think this had a huge effect on him. >> teichner: mandela was in the forefront of growing resistance by the a.n.c., which began to protest the hated laws requiring blacks to carry passes, restricting where they could go. then, a galvanizing moment caught the world's attention. on march 21, 1960, in sharpeville, the peaceful civil rights movement was pierced with bullets. ( gunfire ) walter cronkite reported. >
it was a brutal, racist system that in 1948 was made the law of the land. >> the laws were unjust laws, and they did not oblige obedience. >> teichner: archbishop desmond tutu remembers how it began, as mandela rose in the ranks of leadership of a civil rights group called the african national congress, the a.n.c. >> they were the revolutionaries of their day. they were the wild young men. >> teichner: former "time" magazine editor rick stengel spent countless...
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nelson mandela was a place on the poster, his laws outlawed and found in books and footage that few in south africa saw. that changed in 1990 when he walked out of prison. among those the battle to wage apartheid. >> i have spoken about freedom in my lifetime. your struggle and your commitment has released me to stand before you today. >> nelson mandela led the negotiations with a government that kept him in prison for so long. finding f.w. de klerk a man with whom he could do business. it was a process threatened by violence and the smile disappeared as the anc leader berated those he held responsible, including f.w. de klerk. for nelson mandela the process was never personal. >> we are not dealing with a man, with an individual. we are dealing with a government with a system. >> as a country was pushed and pulled towards democracy. nelson mandela and f.w. de klerk were awarded the "the new york observer." then on the 27th of april 1, '94. south africans of all political persuasions and colours went to the polls. among them nelson mandela voting for the first time. he became the presi
nelson mandela was a place on the poster, his laws outlawed and found in books and footage that few in south africa saw. that changed in 1990 when he walked out of prison. among those the battle to wage apartheid. >> i have spoken about freedom in my lifetime. your struggle and your commitment has released me to stand before you today. >> nelson mandela led the negotiations with a government that kept him in prison for so long. finding f.w. de klerk a man with whom he could do...
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after this law, divestment began in earnest. >> president obama and first lady will travel to south after rick why for mandela's memorial service as will former presidents bill clinton and george w. bush. careen travers reports. >> he will be remembered for the way he led his dignity. >> crowds gathered outside of the home where mandela passed away. there were tears and prayers. there is also singing and dancing. details have been announced about the service that's were honoring his life and legacy. >> we should work together to organize a befitting funeral for this outstanding son of the country. >> his body was moved to patoria. sunday will be a national day of prayer. the stadium has symbolic meaning where he made his last pubic alear yens. closing ceremonies of the of the world cup in >> idea every human being ought to be free and oppression can end. that is what nelson mandela taught us. >> nelson mandela will be buried next sunday. >> and you can watch a special edition on 2020. hosted by robin roberts. >> tune in for that. as sun sets tonight toughest part of a farmer's day is just
after this law, divestment began in earnest. >> president obama and first lady will travel to south after rick why for mandela's memorial service as will former presidents bill clinton and george w. bush. careen travers reports. >> he will be remembered for the way he led his dignity. >> crowds gathered outside of the home where mandela passed away. there were tears and prayers. there is also singing and dancing. details have been announced about the service that's were...
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the law gives strict penalties for those who leak information. and the cruise line for this hour and a note on in tokyo. it is the eye and. oh oh. i do. i am. i will
the law gives strict penalties for those who leak information. and the cruise line for this hour and a note on in tokyo. it is the eye and. oh oh. i do. i am. i will
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mandela's name was banned it was against the law to use his name. if you used the name of nelson mandela that was a criminal offense, that can report you, and stand as a witness in a trial against you, and you could be prosecuted for it. grew one this feeling didn't really know what this man was. >> your mother didn't want you saying his name. >> . >> right. she was afraid. she had three boys who were growing up in a time where it was so easy to befall you at the hands of the state police. she tried to protect us, and it wasn't key for us to get into politics, because she didn't want something to happen, and there were many others around us, my brother who was at college in the mid 80's, had been beaten by police, and been through some harrowing expense pros testing with other students and being beaten and tier gas and that kind of thing. so she had seen what he went with through. but when i was 18 is left home, and went to city to the college the first year, that is when i was a month on campus, and mandela was released. >> do you remember that day
mandela's name was banned it was against the law to use his name. if you used the name of nelson mandela that was a criminal offense, that can report you, and stand as a witness in a trial against you, and you could be prosecuted for it. grew one this feeling didn't really know what this man was. >> your mother didn't want you saying his name. >> . >> right. she was afraid. she had three boys who were growing up in a time where it was so easy to befall you at the hands of the...
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in this country gave rise to apartheid laws in south africa in 1948. even to now, apartheid is no longer a racial matter and social issues but economic, health care, educational, job apartheid is present even today, and he was simply saying that going into iraq was a preemptive strike, broke international law. as a matter of fact, the biggest demonstration in the history of the world took place that day, people saying do not invade iraq. now we admit that 100,000 plus iraqis have been killed, 6,000 plus americans have been killed, 50,000 plus injured, we were wrong. had the wrong target. he was saying we were wrong. president barack obama said we were wrong. the fact is we were wrong. >> what did mandela think about the united states? >> had high hopes for america and had high regard for america. one of the first places he came when he was freed was america, because the fact is demonstrations here, since led by randall robertson and eleanor holmes norton and maxine waters, for a year we demonstrated every day, going to jail to protest. the u.s. congres
in this country gave rise to apartheid laws in south africa in 1948. even to now, apartheid is no longer a racial matter and social issues but economic, health care, educational, job apartheid is present even today, and he was simply saying that going into iraq was a preemptive strike, broke international law. as a matter of fact, the biggest demonstration in the history of the world took place that day, people saying do not invade iraq. now we admit that 100,000 plus iraqis have been killed,...
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so i've been thinking of civil law announced live on tv all day it is going to consult the house with immediate effect. sydney the central take place within the next sixty days. these protests walk on them that the government to take over this move will be enough to protect. it's a cctv. on top koreans are thinking today on the possible reasons behind a rare outbreak of lighting up the crowd before the people set fire to vehicles and catch with him these days it has something to do with the influx of foreigners but one official in singapore denying this. he does a one to cost this as a form where is the essence of situation which one and today a racial paint it. i think we never get an incident on the severity or even a minor incident. there will be some on the man who would want to try it comes to the second week that obedience before and will close and beyond and so one ie think it is important for us not to be sweet by some of this in more sianz cannot be expressed on the bed sometimes when she gets to you. on the treaty to approach every one who can keep being a calm manner to our
so i've been thinking of civil law announced live on tv all day it is going to consult the house with immediate effect. sydney the central take place within the next sixty days. these protests walk on them that the government to take over this move will be enough to protect. it's a cctv. on top koreans are thinking today on the possible reasons behind a rare outbreak of lighting up the crowd before the people set fire to vehicles and catch with him these days it has something to do with the...
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the two open the first all-black law firm in johannesburg. >> they had a very vibrant, very busy law practice. he was a well-known guy who stood for the rights of his people. >> reporter: the relentless campaigns of the anc lead to a government crackdown. the anc is banned, and mandela, along with 155 others, is charged with treason. the trial begins in 1956. >> remember at the same time he was also a leader of the anc, and he was out there continuing to protest, continuing to speak, continuing to lead meetings. it affected his marriage. >> reporter: mandela and evelyn separate during the trial and will divorce in 1958. that same year he meets a young social worker from johannesburg. her name is winnie. >> he once said to me, do you believe in love at first sight? i said, well, i guess so. he said, i do. and i think it was because he really felt that with winnie. >> reporter: amid the tensions of the treason trial, nelson marries winnie. within two years she gives birth to two daughters. five years after it began, the treason trial finally ends in an acquittal for mandela in 1961. bu
the two open the first all-black law firm in johannesburg. >> they had a very vibrant, very busy law practice. he was a well-known guy who stood for the rights of his people. >> reporter: the relentless campaigns of the anc lead to a government crackdown. the anc is banned, and mandela, along with 155 others, is charged with treason. the trial begins in 1956. >> remember at the same time he was also a leader of the anc, and he was out there continuing to protest, continuing to...
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fair ball in two of the circumstances of mr cruz and mr abbas matters the police were called there by law the ones who were concerned about their family members but not because the crime it in committee and with respect to mr chamberlain who was a sixty eight year old retired marine mr chamberlain happened to roll over and trigger his life pendant by mistake and as a pennant it was designed to allow him to call for assistance if you. so there are these individuals were the policeman bureau wow well in the case of bobby bennett i'm not sure if you're familiar with that his mother did call the police department to come help with her son she couldn't handle it on her own but she specifically warned them that he had a mental issue of course we know that he was the grossly shot there after is there something more as a family member she was supposed to do to prevent that from happening or did she do all she could. well she probably did all she could because unfortunately we're not training in how to deal with mental illness all the other issues that the police department had available protocols
fair ball in two of the circumstances of mr cruz and mr abbas matters the police were called there by law the ones who were concerned about their family members but not because the crime it in committee and with respect to mr chamberlain who was a sixty eight year old retired marine mr chamberlain happened to roll over and trigger his life pendant by mistake and as a pennant it was designed to allow him to call for assistance if you. so there are these individuals were the policeman bureau wow...
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born to a royal trail troublemaker mandela lived up to his name, after studying law he dedicated himself to the nonviolent struggle against apartheid, the system of racial segregation imposed by south african on the majority blacks, indiaians and other people of color. but a massacre led him and his party to abandon civil disobedience and take armed. he spent almost 28 years behind bars. mandela's at times brutal imprisonment led to tuberculosis and damaged eyesight. the world clammored for the release of the man that became the symbol of civil rights movement. finally, he walked out of prison, to thunderous applause. four years later he was elected south africa's first black president. let's exam the man behind that status. our first guest had a strong personal connection to nelson mandela. he taught him and his grandmother visited the south african leadner prison. he joins us from massachusets, really a pleasure to be with you. thank you for joining us, i know you are the headmaster of the great tan school, and really very glad that you took time on what must be a hard day for you, giv
born to a royal trail troublemaker mandela lived up to his name, after studying law he dedicated himself to the nonviolent struggle against apartheid, the system of racial segregation imposed by south african on the majority blacks, indiaians and other people of color. but a massacre led him and his party to abandon civil disobedience and take armed. he spent almost 28 years behind bars. mandela's at times brutal imprisonment led to tuberculosis and damaged eyesight. the world clammored for the...
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law to meet with -- >> under u.s. law, to meet with members of the african national congress. so i had to go many times to switzerland, just to meet with anc leaders and supporters to help develop the solidarity movement, which we were mounting here in our own country. when i worked for congressman dellums, i have to say, ron dellums and bill gray, they led the fight for many, many years for sanctions to put this country on the right side of history. i remember ron introduced the sanctions bill, it must have been 12 times. and he would not waver. he kept going and kept going. finally, when president reagan vetoed it, the congress overrode that veto and put the united states on the right side of history. but still, the anc and president mandela were considered terrorists. and it wasn't until i was in south africa a few years ago that i learned of this and came back and then we started our efforts with homeland security and with the state department to get him removed from the terrorist list. and that was for his 90th birthday. >> this is a really important moment, this reagan -
law to meet with -- >> under u.s. law, to meet with members of the african national congress. so i had to go many times to switzerland, just to meet with anc leaders and supporters to help develop the solidarity movement, which we were mounting here in our own country. when i worked for congressman dellums, i have to say, ron dellums and bill gray, they led the fight for many, many years for sanctions to put this country on the right side of history. i remember ron introduced the...